Contents

Origin

Peach's floating ability as it appears in Super Mario All-Stars.

Peach's float ability originates from Super Mario Bros. 2, in which she was the only playable character with the ability to float. Super Mario Bros. 2 was a reskin of Doki Doki Panic. In this game, the character Lina had the ability to float, and she was replaced by Peach in the Mario-themed port. Peach is also able to float in Super Mario 3D World and Super Mario Run.

Overview

Floating lasts for several seconds (in Brawl, SSB4, and Ultimate 2.5 seconds) at a time. Peach can move a large distance horizontally while floating but will not move vertically. The player can also press the attack button while floating to perform an aerial attack, which will still keep them floating after the duration of the attack is finished. The float is a major part of Peach's recovery and is also essential to playing her competitively, especially due to techniques such as jump-canceled fast falling, auto-floating, and float canceling.

In Ultimate, aerial attacks done out of Peach's floating state do not apply the new multiplier applied to short hop aerials no matter how close she is to the floor, always dealing the same amount of damage as full hop aerials no matter what. This is an indirect buff for Peach.

The Super Leaf item functions similarly to Peach's float, but can be used by any other character.

Techniques

Auto-floating

In order to float on command, and at any height, the player must jump and press down when at the desired height while holding the jump button. Once the player has hit down while holding the jump button, they can hold up and let go of the jump button, or simply continue holding the jump button, and keep on floating. This technique has been dubbed the "auto-float" by SuperDoodleMan. Floating at different heights has varying uses depending upon which height the player chooses, but they will generally find themselves floating either at short hop height or just above the ground. If they are falling down, and they have yet to use their float, they can press down and the jump button simultaneously, but make absolutely sure to do so at the same time; otherwise, they will waste their double jump and just float, which could prove disastrous while being edgeguarded. A double blue circle from a double jump or the very distinct sound effect of Peach's double jump will give the player a notice that the technique has been performed successfully.

Float canceling (Melee)

Float canceling (or FCing) is a Melee-exclusive bug relating to floating. If Peach uses an aerial attack while floating, landing during the attack (whether still floating or not) will result in a normal 4-frame landing as if the attack was autocanceled, effectively skipping landing lag altogether. Float canceling is more potent at lag reduction than L-canceling (which can only halve landing lag, not completely skip it) and is significantly easier to perform, making the technique essential for high levels of play.

Using float canceling to generate effectively lagless aerials is arguably the most important aspect of Peach's one-on-one combat, as it allows her to quickly and easily utilize aerials on grounded opponents to setup combos or pressure, and also makes her much more difficult to shield grab while in the air. Float canceling can be used in conjunction with ground-level auto-floating to allow Peach to jump, use an aerial, and land ready to perform another action faster than any other character. Peach's forward aerial is commonly used in this fashion, as it is useful for spacing and is very safe on shield, allowing it setup guaranteed grabs on a shielding opponent.

In Brawl, SSB4 and Ultimate, landing during an aerial attack performed out of Peach's float causes her to undergo the entirety of the aerial's normal landing lag, removing the float cancel technique.

Ground floating

Some uses of ground floating include, but are not explicitly limited to:

At her full jump height, the player can abuse the benefits of Peach's aerial arsenal, especially the spacing on her forward aerial and down aerial. Peach's full jump height can also be used to punish overaggressive combatants or overzealous players who like to jump the gun and attack too early. For example, a player who is using Falco and constantly firing off SHLs, or a player busy SHFFL'ing, can be punished with a float canceled aerial. Ground floating should be used against opponents who remain airborne; it may also be used for following an opponent's DI from one of her launcher attacks.

Double hit glitch

In Brawl, if Peach stops floating while in the middle of a move, it can cause the attack's late hitboxes to hit opponents even if the clean hit has already connected. This applies to her neutral and back aerials and can be used with precise timing to connect with both parts of the attack instead of just one. This glitch is likely due to floating and falling being considered different states, confusing the game into believing that the clean and late hits should be treated separately.

Jump-canceled fast-falling

In Ultimate, Peach can halt her aerial drift immediately by initiating a float at any time during her jump, and falling down. This allows her to have greater aerial control and perform attacks more reliably and quickly when fast-falling.

Trivia

Although Daisy retains Peach's floating ability in Ultimate, she has never been seen using the Floating Jump in the Mario games. In Super Mario Run, Peach has the ability to float, whereas Daisy instead has the ability to double jump, the latter of which is a universal ability shared by all characters in Smash Bros.